Edit: I will say, one thing I didn't like about the Hulu doc is that it gets a little too "memey" at times. Like at certain points they'll say something and then pan to like a clip of The Office or something that's vaguely related to what was said, and it's unnecessary most of the time.

10) Godzilla (1998) - C. This is a very dumb movie, but it would be a whole lot less dumb without Audrey in it.

Sitting through the credits, "Come With Me" starts playing, & I'm like "wait...hold on.....is that Kashmir? .....it is Kashmir!"
That got me thinking about how much my opinion of sampling has grown over the years since I was a kid & hated "I'll Be Missing You", to the point where I frequently love hearing samples of good songs now, but then I'm watching freaking Godzilla & freaking "Come With Me" plays & I just start immediately hating it. So I think the issue isn't that I ever had a problem with sampling; I think the issue is that Puffy just sucks.

^That wan't just a sample, man. Jimmy Page actually sessioned on recordings with Puff the Dragic Driddon, or whatever the hell he's calling himself these days. I remember Piffel Pufficus Gargamel performing 'Come With Me' on SNL back when I was in high school, and Jimmy Page was right there on stage with him. Crouched, Gollum-like, yet smiling. As if to say, '...yes, this is evil incarnate, but, hell, it's paying for my new yacht.'

11) Breakfast at Tiffany's - B+. We both kinda liked it.
The pace of the story is very strange; the entire first half of the film feels like a prologue, & then all of a sudden things are reeling out of control. That's not a problem, though; it's rather fun. The problem is Mickey Rooney in yellowface when his character could simply (a) not be Japanese or (b) not be played by Mickey Rooney in yellowface.

2. Incredibles 2 is not bad. A bit predictable, but a lot of funny moments. I really enjoy E's character. My kid loves Jack Jack. I kinda like that the main antagonist borrows a bit from Lex Luthor in terms of motivation.

^^Whose vision? The producer behind the film wanted to cast an actual Japanese actor (the character is Japanese in the book it's based on, but isn't such a caricature). The producer's (& the author's) original vision was to cast Marilyn Monroe in the lead, but she turned it down, so making it totally according to their vision was already off the table.
The director (who was a hired hand on the project--& the 2nd director hired at that--not the driving force) insisted on Rooney to add a broader comedy style that doesn't match the rest of the film or the original book, but later regretted it, so he apparently doesn't think that part of "his vision" was the right call.
It's also a bad performance. Pretending we lived in a world where there was never any racial disharmony & nobody had reason to be insulted by cross-racial casting, Rooney was still badly miscast. Sometimes some part of your "vision" is a bad idea, & you need people around you to say no.

^Agreed. I just wish they'd gone more off-the-wall with it.

12) Hidden Figures - B+. Some of the more by-the-numbers parts get dull, but on the whole it's a good film.

You're run of the mill horror vomit waste of money. Between its script, actors, and recycled premise, I am surprised to see that it was even produced considering the template the film followed. (not so dissimilar from the first "truth or dare" film made in 2013) It's just all around not scary and feels like a comedian telling jokes in a room of people cringing in embarrassment. If you make it to the end you'll get to see your patience rewarded with a stupid ending and the satisfaction that at least you got to see some bad actors fake die.

1. Aquaman
This honestly felt like watching a long video game cutscene. But like an awesome one. But at the same time - I don't know how to feel about it? It just went from one cool sequence to the next without really having a spirit or soul? Like it was cool. And well-made. But there was some missing umph to me.

2. Isn't It Romantic?
I love Rebel Wilson. I went to see it with my gf for Valentine's Day weekend. I went into it literally not knowing anything about it. I didn't even know it existed until she brought it up that day. Like it's funny. At the same time nothing amazing. Average modern comedy. I will say this though - it's one of the better spoofs. That's really what it is - a spoof on romantic comedies. Usually spoofs these days are so awful - nothing like Mel Brooks or Airplane!. This one was actually okay.

3. John Wick
Great movie. Saw it before. Loved it. Still love it.

4. John Wick: Chapter 2
First time seeing it. Thoroughly enjoyed it.

5. Fletch
Great Chevy Chase movie. I saw this years ago and it could have been the start to a great series like Beverly Hills Cop or something but from what I remember the sequel was subpar.

They hype for this was real. Saw the trailer advertised about a week before it came out so I spent the better part of a couple of days steeped in anticipation. If you're going to dangle Charlie Hunnam and Pedro Pascal in front of me, chances are I'm going to bite. For the first couple of minutes, everything was going according to plan. A couple of run of the mill action shots that I was willing to overlook. Then things took a turn for the worse.

Spoiler.

Ben Affleck plays RedFly in the movie, he's this clean-cut no-nonsense kind of guy whom even though he's been handed this terrible hand in life still stays by the book and doesn't want to do anything illegal. His character development or should I say devolvement makes absolutely no sense and the result is this unintentional ambiguity surrounding his decision making. Even the actors are like, "what the hell is going on with this dude," the entire movie. There are so many times during the film where a rational person would step away from the situation to cut and run. RedFly is considered to be the most rational because he is the leader but he does the exact opposite of that every time.

It gets to the point where they have to choose between dumping something like 200 million dollars on the ground and keeping a couple million each or crashing into the side of a mountain range. There are plenty of ways to get around the Andes or through, without climbing to 11 thousand feet. Better yet, plenty of places where you can land, hide the money for a day and find a new way out of the country. IT'S NOT LIKE YOU WON'T HAVE THE MONEY. They act as though the entire country is scrambling Migs to find them. They don't know they just eloped on a helicopter. So, after that stupid scene, they end up crashing (and all surviving) into a cocaine field where they subsequently execute a few villagers when they pick up 10 grand off the ground. Just pure foolishness and cinematic stupor. The film follows just a laughably predictable timeline where you don't even want to watch it after your 3/4ths of the way through.